Wilkins, John, A discovery of a new world : or a discourse tending to prove, that 'tis probable there may be another Habitable World in the Moon ; with a discourse concerning the Probability of a Passage thither; unto which is added, a discourse concerning a New Planet, tending to prove, that 'tis probable our earth is one of the Planets

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
101 89
102 90
103 91
104 92
105 93
106 94
107 95
108 96
109 97
110 98
111 99
112 100
113 101
114 102
115 103
116 104
117 105
118 106
119 107
120 108
121 109
122 110
123 111
124 112
125 113
126 114
127 115
128 116
129 117
130 118
< >
page |< < (162) of 370 > >|
342162That the Earth may be a Planet.
PROP. X.
That this Hypotheſis is exactly agreeable to
common appearances.
IT hath been already proved, that the Earth
is capable of ſuch a ſcituation and moti-
on, as this Opinion ſuppoſes it to have.
It
remains, that in the laſt place, we ſhew how
agreeable this would be unto thoſe ordinary
ſeaſons of Days, Months, Years, and all
other appearances in the Heavens.
1. As for the difference betwixt Days and
Nights:
’tis evident, That this may be cau-
ſed as well by the Revolution of the Earth,
as the Motion of the Sun;
ſince the Heavenly
Bodies muſt needs ſeem after the ſame man-
ner to Riſe and Set, whether or no they
themſelves by their own Motion do paſs by
our Horizon and Vertical Point;
or whether
our Horizon and Vertical Point, by the Revo-
lution of our Earth, do paſs by them.
Ac-
cording to that of Ariſtotle, {οὐ}υιν 11 De Cælo,
lib, 2. c. 8.
{κι}ν{εἶ}ν τη;
ν ὅψιν το ὸρώμενον There will not
appear any difference, whether or no the
Eye be moved from the Object, or the Ob-
ject from the Eye.
And therefore I cannot
chuſe but wonder that a Man of any

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index